PSNI calls for 100 new constables in recruitment drive

Force seeks Catholic applicants in particular from Fermanagh, Tyrone and Derry

PSNI  officers undergo riot training at Longmoor Army Camp last summer. One hundred new constables are to be recruited into the  force. Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA Wire
PSNI officers undergo riot training at Longmoor Army Camp last summer. One hundred new constables are to be recruited into the force. Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA Wire

One hundred new constables are to be recruited into the PSNI, it has been confirmed.

The recruitment drive is the first in almost three and a half years and the PSNI said it is particularly keen to attract applications from people in Fermanagh, Tyrone and Derry, members of the Catholic community, and people from areas of social deprivation.

Deputy chief constable Judith Gillespie said: "Becoming a police officer is a challenging and rewarding career, but it is not just a job - it is a vocation. Policing with the community is at the very centre of everything we do as a police service, and I encourage people from all sections of the community to consider applying.

"The officers appointed will work directly with and make a very positive contribution to communities across Northern Ireland, so it is vitally important that these officers are fully representative of the communities they will be working in."

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The PSNI plans to appoint a maximum of 378 additional officers throughout 2014/15.

Terry Spence, chairman of the Police Federation union which represents thousands of rank-and-file officers, has pressed for the PSNI to recruit an additional 1,000 officers after a turbulent year left hundreds of police injured and resources stretched.

Mr Spence has claimed some frontline officers were facing burn-out having to work 16- to 20-hour days.

Officers in Northern Ireland also still face a severe threat from dissident republicans and there has been serious sectarian rioting involving loyalists.

The strength of the force currently stands at about 7,000 after numbers were significantly reduced from their pre-ceasefire level as part of the Patten reforms.